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Plum
Year-Round IPM Program
These practices are recommended for a monitoring-based IPM
program that reduces water quality problems related to pesticide
use. Links take you to information on how to monitor, forms to
use, and management practices. Track your progress through the
year with the annual checklist form. This program covers the
major pests of plums; information on additional pests is included
in the Plum Pest Management Guideline.
Water quality becomes impaired when pesticides move off-site
and into water. Each time a pesticide application is considered,
review the Pesticide Application Checklist at
the bottom of this page to learn how to minimize water quality
problems.
Dormant/delayed-dormant season activities (leaf fall to bud swell) |
Bloom season activities (green tip to petal fall) |
Fruit development period activities (petal fall to harvest) |
| What should you be doing during this period? |
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Take a fruit damage sample to assess the overall effectiveness of
the current year's IPM program and to determine next year's needs.
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| Store picked fruit below 40° C to prevent storage rot or ripe
fruit rot. |
Postharvest activities (Fall) |
| What should you be doing during this period? |
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Consider zinc sulfate application** to hasten leaf fall
in order to disrupt aphid's life cycle. |
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Consider planting cover
crop. |
| Plan for next year. |
**Pesticide application checklist |
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Before a pesticide application is made and when planning for possible applications in an IPM program,
review and complete this checklist to minimize water quality and other problems.
- Follow each practice in the year-round IPM Program.
- Identify target pest, treatment threshold, trigger, or justification for treatment.
- Consider nonchemical alternatives.
- Identify important natural enemies that might be impacted by pesticide application.
- Choose a pesticide from the UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines for the target pest, considering
impact on natural enemies and consulting the UC
IPM Watertox Database for water quality concerns. Select an alternative chemical or nonchemical
treatment when risk is high.
- Consider chemical class if pesticide resistance is
an issue.
- Identify sensitive areas (for example, waterways or riparian areas) surrounding your application
site.
- Identify practices or mitigation measures to be used to reduce pesticide movement off site.
- Choose sprayers and application methods that minimize off-site movement.
- Review and follow pesticide handling, storage, and disposal guidelines.
- After an application is made, record application date, product used, rate, and location of application.
- Follow up to confirm that treatment was effective.
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